Jose Maria Marin, former president of Brazil's football federation, is one 14 defendants charged so far in the U.S. government's investigation into corruption at FIFA.

FIFA defendant Jose Maria Marin of Brazil pleaded not guilty Tuesday to charges stemming from the U.S. government’s massive probe of corruption in international soccer.

Extradited on Tuesday from Switzerland, where he has been jailed for five months, Marin appeared shaken and frail during a 40-minute arraignment hearing at the federal court in Brooklyn. At one point the proceeding was halted so the white-haired, 83-year-old could sit and collect his strength. When it was over he held his wife in a long, tearful embrace.

Marin, once a powerful figure in Brazilian soccer, is accused of trafficking in bribes related to lucrative soccer broadcast deals. On Tuesday he wore a blue sweater and grey pants, and listened intently to an interpreter who translated the words of U.S. District Court Judge Raymond Dearie, who is overseeing the sprawling case.

Marin signed a $15 million bond that secures his release from custody while he awaits trial on charges of fraud, money laundering and racketeering. Instead of a jail cell, Marin will be staying in an apartment in Trump Tower, wearing an electronic monitoring device. He is forbidden from interacting with co-defendants or anyone associated with FIFA and the soccer confederations at the heart of the case.

The conditions of Marin's release call for a private security firm to accompany him to and from court appearances, and to watch over him at all times except when he is in conversations with his attorneys.

“The costs of all that monitoring shall be borne by the defendant,” said one of the prosecutors in the case, reading into the record the long list of conditions for Marin’s release.

Marin has been in the custody of Swiss police since his arrest on May 27 in Zurich at the Baur au Lac Hotel, where he and other FIFA members were attending meetings at the organization’s headquarters. He was flown from Zurich to Newark on Tuesday morning, accompanied on the flight by U.S. federal agents.